Topic 13: Australia after the Boom (Dog Days) Flashcards
1
Q
What is the setting of Garnaut’s Dog Days?
A
- We are in the third stage of a boom where investment falls.
- These projects will employ few works in their steady state production, so won’t contribute much to growth.
- Increased production of iron ore and natural gas, as demand falls, will decrease export prices.
2
Q
What are the primary shocks in Garnaut’s Dog Days?
A
- Deteriorating terms of trade as commodity prices fall (NM shifts right)
- Investment decline (decrease in rCe)
- US monetary policy tightens, raising bond yeilds in Au (KA right from r* inc)
3
Q
What are the secondary shocks in Garnaut’s Dog Days?
A
- Pessimism (decreased YNe, ΔeRe and πe)
- US recovery that raises export demand to US & China, partially reversing one of the primary shocks, so NM left from (Y* inc).
4
Q
What are the problems resulting from the Gaurnot shocks?
A
Monetary contraction could hurt industries sensitive to the short rate (housing) and or cause a financial meltdown if we have a bubble.
Pc will inflate considerably
Decrease in investment will hurt longrun.
5
Q
What is Garnaut’s solutions?
A
Another round of micro reforms.
6
Q
Outline Garnaut’s micro reforms
A
- Not in mining, productivity here will increase naturally following the end of the boom.
- Trade distortions and rents: protection remains a source of inefficiency at home, particuarly in oligopolistic industries in manufacturing & services.
- Network services:
- Electricity impared by enviromental & reliability regulation
- Water heavily regulated or supplied by state-owned systems, with water intensive industries being very protected
- Financial services & insurance have large barriers to entry with high rents
- Transport has many public-private partnetships where states underwrite private returns linked to margins over PC. As this inflates relative to PY these will become costly.
7
Q
A